Downton Abbey: The Exhibition has landed in Boston at The Castle at Park Plaza for an extremely limited three month run. An appropriately themed afternoon tea was held on Friday, June 14th, featuring Executive Chairman of Carnival Films, Gareth Neame, and members of the press and socialites (aka social media influencers).

…there is an extended train fight, daresay, ‘train battle’ that of course perked me right up! Lots of metal for Magneto to play with in a train fight!

One of SNL's newest cast members is rising star Chris Redd. Chris is also known for appearing on Netflix' Disjointed and in movies Popstar: Never Stop Never Stopping opposite Andy Samberg, The House and A Futile and Stupid Gesture. Yesterday, Redd dropped his new album But Here We Are on Comedy Central Records (available everywhere).

Z2 Comics keeps it coming withIndoctrination, an apocalyptic political thriller in the vein of the first season ofTrue Detectivemixed with the scary realization that people are coerced into believing what groups are capable of.

Writer Michael Moreci (Roche Limit, Hoax Hunters, Dawn of the Planet of the Apes) and artist Matt Battaglia (Roche Limit) join us for a spin on theCosmic Treadmillin advance of the June launch.

The book is already getting major attention from someTrue Detectivefan sites, but as the following interview will reveal, there is more toIndoctrination,as our heroes face a far more sinister force.

Between death cults and sleeper cells,Indoctrinationtackles fear, at a time when the world is growing tired of threats from inside and outside forces.

Matt Battaglia:Readers can expect a thoughtful thriller in the vein of classic 70s cinema, but wrestling with the potent issues of our times.

Michael Moreci:What Matt said. I think the series reminds me a lot ofHannibal, in that it’s slow, methodical, and the underlying developments are so unsettling that it makes everything else all the more frightening. We want to make a book that gets readers at their core with intense, thought-provoking, and chilling horror and crime. It’s very unique in a lot of ways, in a lot of GOOD ways, and there’s never been a better time for it to hit—in regard to the current political climate and the comics climate.